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Definitions

fungible

[fuhn-juh-buhl] / ˈfʌn dʒə bəl /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“What we’ve tried to do is make the investments as fungible as possible,” Gitlin said.

From The Wall Street Journal • Feb. 5, 2026

If attention is fungible, then Netflix’s share, and the merged firm’s share, would fall below the presumption established in the 1963 precedent.

From Barron's • Dec. 8, 2025

Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Thomas Blakey said Microsoft “highlighted its fungible fleet that can be used across the AI lifecycle, be continuously modernized, and used across the company’s platform of services.”

From MarketWatch • Oct. 30, 2025

In the end, international law is subject to all sorts of interpretation, what a former senior minister describes as "fungible" - in other words, it's far from fixed.

From BBC • Jun. 21, 2025

Economic goods, as distinct from money, are not generally "fungible" to the extent that would make them indifferent objects of legal rights.

From The Value of Money by Anderson, Benjamin M.